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2025 (7) TMI 627 - HC - GST


The core legal questions considered by the Court in this matter include:

(a) Whether the petitioner was entitled to revise its excise returns for the period prior to 1 July 2017 electronically, given that the GST regime commenced from that date and the erstwhile excise portal was non-functional thereafter;

(b) Whether the petitioner's manual filing of revised excise returns post 1 July 2017, along with subsequent revision of Form TRAN-1 within the timeline prescribed by the Supreme Court, was valid for claiming transitional credit under Section 140 of the CGST Act;

(c) Whether the rejection of the petitioner's revised TRAN-1 on the ground that the revised excise returns were not electronically filed and that the claim was not made within the prescribed time-limit under the Cenvat Credit Rules was justified;

(d) The applicability of the Supreme Court's directions in Union of India v. Filco Trade Centre Pvt. Ltd. regarding reopening of the GST portal for revision of TRAN-1 forms;

(e) The effect of procedural non-compliance, such as manual filing instead of electronic filing, on the substantive right to transitional credit;

(f) The relevance of precedents permitting rectification of errors post statutory timelines where no revenue loss occurs.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis:

1. Electronic Filing Requirement of Revised Excise Returns Pre-GST Regime

The respondents contended that revision of excise returns had to be effected electronically as per Notification No. 4 of 2010 dated 19 February 2010, and since the petitioner did not comply, the claim was liable to be rejected. The Court examined the legal framework governing excise returns prior to GST and noted that the GST regime commenced on 1 July 2017, after which the erstwhile excise portal ceased to function.

The Court observed that the respondents failed to demonstrate that the excise portal remained operational post 1 July 2017 to enable electronic revision of returns for periods prior to GST. Consequently, it was physically impossible for the petitioner to revise excise returns electronically after the GST regime came into effect. The Court held that rejecting the claim on this ground would compel the petitioner to perform an impossible act, which is impermissible. This reasoning was supported by the absence of any statutory or procedural mechanism to revise excise returns electronically post GST rollout.

2. Timeliness of Claim for Transitional Credit and Applicability of Cenvat Credit Rules

The respondents relied on the third proviso to Rule 4 of the Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004, which bars taking credit after one year from the date of specified documents, to justify rejection of the claim as time-barred. The Court scrutinized the timeline: the relevant bills of entry were dated May/June 2017, and the one-year period expired in May/June 2018. The petitioner had communicated the inadvertent omission within this period by letter dated 16 February 2018, requesting rectification and transition of credit.

The Court emphasized that the petitioner's letter was a timely disclosure of the error, and the respondents failed to respond or guide the petitioner on the transition process. The Court further noted that the petitioner initially filed its TRAN-1 on 26 August 2017 without the additional credit, and only after the Supreme Court's directions in Filco Trade Centre (supra) reopening the GST portal for revision of TRAN-1, was the petitioner able to file the revised excise return manually and submit a revised TRAN-1 within the extended deadline.

The Court reasoned that since the petitioner had no electronic means to revise excise returns post GST and had notified the error within the prescribed period, the rejection on grounds of delay was unsustainable. The Court applied the principle that procedural timelines cannot override substantive rights, especially when technical or systemic impediments exist.

3. Effect of Supreme Court's Directions in Filco Trade Centre Case

The Supreme Court in Filco Trade Centre (supra) acknowledged technical difficulties in revising TRAN-1 forms and directed reopening of the GST portal from 1 September 2022 to 31 October 2022, later extended to 30 November 2022, to facilitate revision. The petitioner leveraged this direction to file the revised excise return manually and revise TRAN-1 accordingly.

The Court recognized that the petitioner's actions were in compliance with the Supreme Court's directions and that the respondents' rejection ignored this crucial context. The Court held that the petitioner's revised claim was made within the time frame allowed by the apex court, reinforcing the legitimacy of the claim.

4. Substantive Right to Transitional Credit vs. Procedural Formalities

The petitioner relied on several judgments, notably Aberdare Technologies Pvt. Ltd. (supra), where the Court allowed rectification of errors beyond statutory periods if there was no loss of revenue. The Court accepted this principle, emphasizing that the right to transitional credit is substantive and cannot be defeated by mere procedural lapses, such as manual filing due to non-functionality of electronic portals.

The Court also cited the Gujarat High Court's decision in Jekson Vision Pvt. Ltd. (supra), which held that manual filing of excise returns should not be invalidated when electronic filing was impossible, and that alternative mechanisms must be adopted to protect vested rights. The Court underscored that computerization is a facilitative tool and cannot be allowed to frustrate statutory entitlements.

5. Treatment of Competing Arguments

The respondents' insistence on strict adherence to electronic filing and timelines was rejected due to factual impossibility and absence of any prejudice or loss of revenue. The Court noted that the petitioner had acted diligently by notifying the error within one year and subsequently complying with the Supreme Court's directions for revision.

The Court balanced the competing interests by prioritizing the substantive right to credit and the principle of equity over rigid procedural compliance, especially where technical constraints existed.

Conclusions

The Court quashed the impugned order rejecting the revised TRAN-1 and directed the respondents to accept the manually filed revised excise return dated 23 November 2022. The respondents were further directed to permit transition of the additional credit of Rs. 1,16,29,351/- and give consequential effect under the GST regime within eight weeks.

Significant Holdings:

"Post 1 July 2017, the portal under the erstwhile regime of excise was not functional. Therefore, the petitioner could not have revised its excise returns filed under the erstwhile regime after introduction of the GST regime... In the absence of any electronic mode available post 1 July 2017 to revise the excise return of the period prior to 1 July 2017, the claim of the petitioner cannot be rejected on the ground that the revised return ought to have been filed electronically."

"The petitioner on realising the mistake... immediately vide letter dated 16 February 2018 informed the GST authorities about the said inadvertent error and requested for transitioning the credit attributable to these 3 documents. This letter is within a period of one year specified in the Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004... The respondents ought to have guided the petitioner on account of the fact of transitioning from the old regime to the new regime on this issue."

"The rejection by the respondents is ill-founded... where there is no loss to the revenue, rectification of error post the statutory period is permissible."

"Computerization of return filing is merely a means for processing the disclosures and claims of the assessee in a transparent and efficient manner... Substantive rights cannot be curtailed for mere procedural infirmities such as manually filing of excise return."

These holdings establish that the substantive right to transitional credit under Section 140 CGST Act cannot be defeated by procedural technicalities when electronic revision was impossible, provided the assessee has acted within reasonable time and no revenue loss occurs. The Court's directions reinforce the principle that procedural mechanisms must accommodate practical realities to protect vested rights.

 

 

 

 

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